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‘Abused’ maid challenges Hong Kong law that forces her to live with employer

Lawyer says the legislation is unconstitutional and a danger to the basic rights of foreign helpers

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Protesters at a march in 2014 to highlight the plight of maids abused by their employers. Photo: Nora Tam
Danny Lee

A foreign domestic helper who claims to have suffered severe abuse at the hands of her employer has challenged the law requiring them to live with their hosts.

Daly and Associates, which is handling the landmark application for a judicial review, said the “live-in rule” heightened the risk of a breach in the helpers’ human, labour and economic rights and was unconstitutional under Article 39 of the Basic Law and Article 4 of the Hong Kong Bill of Rights.

These guaranteed both employer and employees privacy and the right to choose his or her residence.

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It is a mandatory requirement for helpers to live and sleep at their place of employment.

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Lawyer Mark Daly said it was “an important challenge to the mandatory live-in policy, which forces foreign domestic helpers to make the difficult decision between finding gainful employment and providing for their families, or their basic human rights and dignity where they are subjected to a heightened risk of labour-like conditions”.

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